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AULIC

Volume 3 · 177 words · 1810 Edition

an epithet given to certain officers of the empire, who compose a court which decides, without appeal, in all causes entered in it. Thus we say, aulic council, aulic chamber, aulic counsellor.

The aulic council is composed of a president, who is a catholic; of a vice chancellor, presented by the archbishop of Mentz; and of 18 councillors, nine of whom are Protestants and nine Catholics. They are divided into a bench of lawyers, and always follow the emperor's court; for which reason they are called jussitum imperatoris, the emperor's justice, and aulic council. The aulic court ceases at the death of the emperor; whereas the imperial chamber of Spire is perpetual, representing not only the deceased emperor, but but the whole Germanic body, which is reputed never to die.

in the Sorbonne and foreign universities, is an act which a young divine maintains upon being admitted a doctor of divinity. It begins by a harangue of the chancellor, addressed to the young doctor, after which he receives the cap, and prefides at the aulic or disputation.